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The French Open men’s draw is officially scheduled to be revealed on Thursday, but fans were left surprised on Wednesday after what appeared to be the full bracket briefly surfaced on the ATP website, quickly sending social media into a frenzy.

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Images showing both halves of the draw soon began circulating online, with seeded players, qualifiers, and first-round matchups all seemingly visible in the full 128-player bracket.

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Early draw leaks are not entirely unprecedented in tennis. At the 2023 Australian Open, the men’s singles draw was briefly visible on the tournament’s app before the official ceremony, leading to widespread confusion before it was pulled down.

The ATP and Grand Slam organisers use placeholder systems and test environments in the days leading up to official draw ceremonies, and it is not unheard of for those systems to surface briefly in public-facing interfaces before being caught and corrected.

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What made Wednesday’s main draw glitch particularly interesting was the timing. Roland Garros qualifying is already underway, with lucky losers still to be determined before the main draw is finalised. A complete 128-player bracket appearing online two days before the official ceremony, with qualifiers already slotted into specific positions, would be unusual even by the standards of a live test.

The official draw ceremony for both the men’s and women’s singles draws is scheduled for Thursday at Roland Garros, meaning the bracket that appeared online on Wednesday was either a premature reveal or a placeholder that was never meant to be seen.

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The structural irregularities in the leaked draw added another layer of confusion. At Grand Slams, seedings run from 1 to 32, with strict placement rules ensuring no two seeded players can meet before the third round. The top two seeds, Sinner and Alexander Zverev, are placed at opposite ends of the draw, with seeds 3 and 4 in separate quarters and seeds 5 through 8 in separate eighths.

In the draw that appeared online, players were assigned seeding numbers well beyond 32, something that is structurally impossible under Grand Slam seeding rules and the clearest indication that what surfaced was not a finalised official document.

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Tennis fans react to the glitch dilemma

Reactions on the internet were instant and, as expected, polarized. There were some fans who thought that it was just a dry run gone wrong. “Presumably, they do a dry run? Could also be a glitch, but in tennis, you absolutely never know,” one user wrote. Others jumped to the conclusion that certain irregularities in the draw were the most obvious proof that it was not the official draw but an error in the system.

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“Seeds going beyond 32, looks glitched,” one fan noted. “Obviously a glitch, look at the possible second-round matches. The seeds can’t be matched,” added another, pointing to seeded players appearing in positions that would produce impossible early-round clashes.

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Early tennis draw leaks like this are usually caused by internal database glitches, staging pages going live too soon, or automated scraping of unpublished content during backend updates. In most cases, the bracket that appears ahead of time is simply part of a test or pre-live system that hasn’t been officially locked in.

That’s why tournaments still rely on a formal, randomized draw ceremony to confirm matchups, anything seen before that is typically treated as unofficial until the official reveal takes place.

Not everyone was willing to give the ATP the benefit of the doubt. “W*F and they still dare to gaslight us by saying the draw ain’t rigged,” one fan wrote, a comment reflecting the long-held suspicion of the tennis world about draw ceremonies at big tournaments.

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The ATP has not officially commented on the glitch. Roland Garros qualifying has already begun, and the official main draw ceremony will begin on Thursday. The answer to whether the brackets floating on Wednesday are a live test version or just a rogue placeholder will soon be known. For now, though, fans were briefly treated to a draw they weren’t supposed to see yet on Wednesday afternoon, one that quickly made its way across social media before any official confirmation.

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Prem Mehta

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Prem Mehta is a Tennis Journalist at EssentiallySports, contributing athlete-led coverage shaped by firsthand competitive experience. A former tennis player, he picked up the sport at the age of seven after watching Roger Federer compete at Wimbledon, a moment that sparked a long-term commitment to the game. Ranked among the Top 100 players in India in the Under-14 category, Prem brings a grounded understanding of tennis at the grassroots and developmental levels. His sporting background extends beyond the court, having also competed in district-level cricket, giving him exposure to high-performance environments across disciplines. Prem transitioned from playing to writing to remain closely connected to the sport beyond competition. Before joining EssentiallySports, he worked as a Tennis Analyst at Sportskeeda, covering major ATP and WTA events while tracking trends across both Tours. His coverage centres on match analysis, player narratives, and opinion-led pieces that balance data with intuition. With an academic background in psychology and a strong interest in sport psychology, Prem adds contextual depth to moments of pressure and decision-making, offering readers insight into what unfolds between the lines as much as what appears on the scoreboard.

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Pranav Venkatesh

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